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It was lights out in a dark room (i.e. a storage room in the basement - that is rarely litGotcha, just trying to help out the best i can, was one tank fully blacked out or just lights off ?
I didn't explain entirely the tank setup -I have a question though. How do we rule out that the bacteria are not "fed" by whatever dying organisms in the rock?
PS - Yes - I wasn't taking offense - The purpose of this forum was to generate experiments - as well as discussion of the experiments... a back and forth!!Gotcha, just trying to help out the best i can, was one tank fully blacked out or just lights off ?
Have you got readings for no3 and po4 for the day before you added the ammonium? Would be interesting to see if nutrients bottom out at some pointSo here are the results - after 24 hours the Ammonia alerts are both in the 'safe' zone. I did not do an API comparison - just because - the key point is safety - and both are clearly yellow - despite the lightning.
So I t appears that even after a month of no 'feeding' - this rock can still process 2 ppm ammonia in 24 hours.
No but this time - I will have itHave you got readings for no3 and po4 for the day before you added the ammonium? Would be interesting to see if nutrients bottom out at some point
It will be interesting to see as normally we associate some species of dinoflagellates thriving with nutrients bottoming out, and I haven’t noticed if this was the case in your experienceNo but this time - I will have it
You will see from the initial pictures - the rock is crystal clean. with no algae, etc - including the rock that was 'in the sump' originally (dark)It will be interesting to see as normally we associate some species of dinoflagellates thriving with nutrients bottoming out, and I haven’t noticed if this was the case in your experience
I’m taking that you still have one dark one lit, not sure if I miss the data, did both systems recover at the same rate on the 1 month without any source of ammonium?You will see from the initial pictures - the rock is crystal clean. with no algae, etc - including the rock that was 'in the sump' originally (dark)
No I combined them both - because there was no difference - the interesting thing the corralling - was still just as pink as 3 months agoI’m taking that you still have one dark one lit, not sure if I miss the data, did both systems recover at the same rate on the 1 month without any source of ammonium?
no - I put all the rock into one tank.I’m taking that you still have one dark one lit, not sure if I miss the data, did both systems recover at the same rate on the 1 month without any source of ammonium?
I understand although would be interesting to see if the lit tank would still process the ammonia faster than the dark tank, as it’s all in one are you keeping it dark or lit?No I combined them both - because there was no difference - the interesting thing the corralling - was still just as pink as 3 months ago
The light is off - tomorrow - which will be approx 3 months I will add 2 ppm ammonia to the tank (after making the appropriate baseline measurements) - then timing how long it takes to get to zero - I'm not going to do a ton of tests - with API - instead - except for beginning and end - will do Nitrate, PO4 salinity, etc. Then - my wish is your commandI would imagine you doing it dark as nitrifying bacteria is your main goal, I can tell you now that you could go close to 12 months and still wake up that bacteria, I know that because that’s the shelf life of most live sand bags. And if you were to determine different a lot of companies would have a lot to answer. In addition most nitrifying bacteria in a bottle have a similar life shelf, live nitrifying bacteria is always in a dark bottle to not allow any light trough.
Now you know I like to challenge you in a positive way, can we bring back the light cycle as you would in a system to see if we can kill the bacteria in two weeks or under after the nutrients in the system are depleted. You already made a control in your first test and the one you about to do on the 3 month mark. I think it could make it interesting.
If your light are on I apologise and my assumption is wrong.
I think it could be something interesting to do and will bring a lot of curiosity and answer, if the tank is lit and nutrients are down things will start to go down hill very fast.The light is off - tomorrow - which will be approx 3 months I will add 2 ppm ammonia to the tank (after making the appropriate baseline measurements) - then timing how long it takes to get to zero - I'm not going to do a ton of tests - with API - instead - except for beginning and end - will do Nitrate, PO4 salinity, etc. Then - my wish is your command
The light is off - tomorrow - which will be approx 3 months I will add 2 ppm ammonia to the tank (after making the appropriate baseline measurements) - then timing how long it takes to get to zero - I'm not going to do a ton of tests - with API - instead - except for beginning and end - will do Nitrate, PO4 salinity, etc. Then - my wish is your command
An N of 1 but I fallowed a tank for two years. No light, no feeding, no heat, only BS inverts like pods, worms, only thing on was pumps. After over two years it was still cycled and I added fish, corals, and inverts on day one of testing it.Maybe I will leave it for 2 months now
An N of 1 but I fallowed a tank for two years. No light, no feeding, no heat, only BS inverts like pods, worms, only thing on was pumps. After over two years it was still cycled and I added fish, corals, and inverts on day one of testing it.
But there is not nothing in the tank. There is a ton of micro and macro fauna living and dying. When you remove the outside food source, a decline begins and some of the perished become food for the living. I assume that the bacteria in a bottle start to die and that death provides food for those that are still alive. As it were, there is likely some calculable half life.if I have nothing in my tank for x weeks - will it re-cycle.